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pytimeparse2

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Time expression parser.

Installation

To install this package, run one of the following:

Conda
$conda install themachinethatgoesping::pytimeparse2

Usage Tracking

1.7.1
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Description

pytimeparse2: time expression parser

.. image:: https://github.com/onegreyonewhite/pytimeparse2/actions/workflows/check.yml/badge.svg?branch=master :target: https://github.com/onegreyonewhite/pytimeparse2/actions :alt: Pipeline status

.. image:: https://badge.fury.io/py/pytimeparse2.svg :target: https://badge.fury.io/py/pytimeparse2

This is a pytimeparse <https://github.com/wroberts/pytimeparse>_ based project with the aim of optimizing functionality and providing stable support.

Copyright (c) 2021 Sergey Klyuykov [email protected]

Licensed under the MIT License (see source file pytimeparse2.py for details).

A small Python library to parse various kinds of time expressions, inspired by this StackOverflow question <http://stackoverflow.com/questions/4628122/how-to-construct-a-timedelta-object-from-a-simple-string>_.

The single function pytimeparse2.parse defined in the library parses time expressions like the following:

  • 32m
  • 2h32m
  • 3d2h32m
  • 1w3d2h32m
  • 1w 3d 2h 32m
  • 1 w 3 d 2 h 32 m
  • 4:13
  • 4:13:02
  • 4:13:02.266
  • 2:04:13:02.266
  • 2 days, 4:13:02 (uptime format)
  • 2 days, 4:13:02.266
  • 5hr34m56s
  • 5 hours, 34 minutes, 56 seconds
  • 5 hrs, 34 mins, 56 secs
  • 2 days, 5 hours, 34 minutes, 56 seconds
  • 1.2 m
  • 1.2 min
  • 1.2 mins
  • 1.2 minute
  • 1.2 minutes
  • 172 hours
  • 172 hr
  • 172 h
  • 172 hrs
  • 172 hour
  • 1.24 days
  • 5 d
  • 5 day
  • 5 days
  • 5.6 wk
  • 5.6 week
  • 5.6 weeks

It returns the time as a number of seconds (an integer value if possible, otherwise a floating-point number)::

>>> from pytimeparse import parse
>>> parse('1.2 minutes')
72

For months and years, the library does not consider complications such as leap- years and leap-seconds. Instead, it assumes "30 days for a month" and "365 days for a year" as the basis for calculations with those units.

  • 2 mo
  • 2 months
  • 3y
  • 3 years
  • 1y2mo3w4d5h6m7s8ms

For better capability with dates, use keyword as_timedelta=True which mark for function returns value as datetime.timedelta or dateutil.relitivedelta.relativedelta (if installed)::

>>> from pytimeparse import parse
>>> parse('24h', as_timedelta=True)
relativedelta(days=+1)

You can also forced disable dateutil support by calling disable_dateutil() before parse(...). For returning support call enable_dateutil().

Notes

A number of seconds can be converted back into a string using the datetime module in the standard library, as noted in this other StackOverflow question <http://stackoverflow.com/questions/538666/python-format-timedelta-to-string>_::

>>> from pytimeparse import parse
>>> import datetime
>>> parse('1 day, 14:20:16')
138016
>>> str(datetime.timedelta(seconds=138016))
'1 day, 14:20:16'

Future work

  1. Speed up with Cython for some python versions.
  2. Use github actions for testing and releasing.

About

Summary

Time expression parser.

Last Updated

Jun 6, 2025 at 13:05

License

MIT

Supported Platforms

noarch